kartracer55
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jun 21, 2005
- Messages
- 5,317
Well we all know what a torque wrench is, and how to use it (hopefully) but whoda thought it was this complicated. Im going to post this, and hope somebody wants to comment, provide more info, clarify, or discuss this. Personally I think all this sort of thing is really cool, unfortunatly, it opens up a whole new world of second guessing myself when I go to torque something...
"From Shigley's "Mechanical Engineering Design" 7th ed.
Bolt Condition K Factor
Nonplated black finish .30
Zinc-plated .20
Lubricated .18
Cadimum-plated .16
With Bowman Anit-Seize .12
With Bowman-Grip nuts .09
Torque = K*Fi*d
Fi = Sp*At*0.75 (or use 0.90 for permanent connections)
You can look up At (Tensil Stress Area) and Sp (Proof strength)
Example: I have a 7/8-14UNF-2A Grade 8 bolt that is phos & oil and spec'ed to 400-425 lb-ft.
Phos & Oil
K = .16 (from here)
Sp = 120 ksi (aka 120,000 psi) Min Proof Strength for Grade 8 from .25"-1.5"
At = .509 in^2
I'll assume non-permanent so 0.75
d = .875in
Torque = 0.16*120,000*0.509*0.75*0.875 = 6413.4 in*lb
Divide by 12 to get ft*lb
Torque = 534.45 or 535 ft*lb (for you huge nerds out there don't worry that the units don't cancle out...that is taken care of in the K factor )"
Pretty cool, but
Jim
Discuss!
"From Shigley's "Mechanical Engineering Design" 7th ed.
Bolt Condition K Factor
Nonplated black finish .30
Zinc-plated .20
Lubricated .18
Cadimum-plated .16
With Bowman Anit-Seize .12
With Bowman-Grip nuts .09
Torque = K*Fi*d
Fi = Sp*At*0.75 (or use 0.90 for permanent connections)
You can look up At (Tensil Stress Area) and Sp (Proof strength)
Example: I have a 7/8-14UNF-2A Grade 8 bolt that is phos & oil and spec'ed to 400-425 lb-ft.
Phos & Oil
K = .16 (from here)
Sp = 120 ksi (aka 120,000 psi) Min Proof Strength for Grade 8 from .25"-1.5"
At = .509 in^2
I'll assume non-permanent so 0.75
d = .875in
Torque = 0.16*120,000*0.509*0.75*0.875 = 6413.4 in*lb
Divide by 12 to get ft*lb
Torque = 534.45 or 535 ft*lb (for you huge nerds out there don't worry that the units don't cancle out...that is taken care of in the K factor )"
Pretty cool, but
Jim
Discuss!